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L fi f w U U Li wf a h o-R;7 3 .u n n rn. r; 1 r is vcollcgctimes.com ""i w Inside this issue Special Feature: A student's musings and reflections on the newly finished library. ft V Sports editor Matt Beaudin weighs in on what is in store with university athletics. BS L UV One card: blessing or curse? Read about the pros and cons. H6 International "Da Vinci Experience" exhibit makes a stop at the Woodbury Art Museum. Monson to give dedicatory prayer w . .. . Court fly ol Ccdkijf Mjrkftirwj Thomas S. Monson at the signing of the SB 70 bill. Jared Magill r 1 Managing editor ' President Thomas S. Monson of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been invited to attend the official university naming and ribbon cutting event on Tuesday, July 1. The ceremony will be held at 10 a.m. on the west side of the new library. According to the office of UVU President William Se-derburg, Monson, who more than 30 years ago attended the ground-breaking ceremonies for the Orem campus at the time known as Utah Technical College will offer a dedicatory prayer. Monson is scheduled to speak at a luncheon after the ribbon cutting. According to Sederburg, as of yet, no one has put up the required $10 million donation to have the new library named after him or her. In an interview with UVU Review, Sederburg said, "There's still an opportunity for your family and friends and relatives to name it after you if they want to." Tours of the new library are available during the Library Open House on Monday, June 30. i i . i 7 - 1 i 1 1 m i New UVU library is greenest building in Utah i is 5, f TT Li 'iii,; a Hanna Hopkinson p ' News writer 1 The new library at UVU is the most energy efficient building in the state. Being the first building constructed under the guidelines of Utah's High Performance Building program, the Digital Learning Center will save UVU close to $100,000 per year in utility costs. "Just walking through the halls, even in its unfinished state, I'm inspired," Gov. Jon M. Huntsman said of the library during his tour earlier this month. Gov. Huntsman, a main benefactor in the Utah building program, also noted that the library is 65-90 percent more energy efficient than buildings built to the same code. The new library's energy efficient features are extensive. The windows throughout the entire structure permit only 27 percent of the sun's heat to enter. This allows building temperature to be more easily regulated, instantly lowering utility costs. The exterior of the building has aluminum ledges called solar harvesting devices. These not only add to the library's artistic design, but they shade the interior and reflect outside heat, while taking advantage of and using natural light. In the winter, the heat generated by the hundreds of computer servers will be re-circulated into the air to warm the library. The building also includes highly efficient lighting and cooling technology, directindirect evaporative cooling,ul-trahigh-efficiency ballasts and lamps with daylight switching and occupancy sensors, and light-colored roofing to reduce building heat. Additionally, the library takes advantage of the geothermal wells the campus has already been using by transferring heat in and out of the building through aquifers under campus. "The library is unbe- See LIBRARY A4 . i The new Digital Learning Center is one-of-a-kind in Utah. It is 65-90 percent more energy efficient than any other building built in the same code. The building will save UVU close to $100,000 per year in utility costs by using devices such as the exterior solar harvesting devices which shade the interior while reflecting outside heat. It will also recirculate heat generated by computer servers to warm the library during the winters. Sederburg7 s influence from college to university President Sederburg showing his school spirit. He had been the mastermind at establishing university status. Jared Magill f Managing editor It has been years in the making and now the day has officially come. The countless fundraisers, debates on the floor of the state senate, and marketing campaigns have brought the school to the eve of its ascension to university status. There have been many whose efforts have been conspicuously influential throughout the transition, but none more than President William Sederburg. UVU Review recently sat down with our buddy Bill to hear his side of the story. The conversation ranged from the individual successes and defeats along the way, plans for the future of the institution and the future of the man himself. From his days of expanding Ferris State University in Michigan to his current expansion of UVSC to UVU, President Sederburg has taken higher education to a higher level. President Sederburg has set up the ways in which UVU will offer the engaging education he envisions at the school. To read more about President Seder-burg's vision for UVU see page A5. To read about President Sederburg's possible future plans see page A8. In Memory of Christopher Kirsch 1945-2008 Christopher Kirsch, a UVU professor in geography and Latin American history, was killed on Father's day by a fatal stabbing by his son. A few of his colleagues shared their thoughts with UVU Review about Chris and his time at UVU. See Kirsch A4 T r T : i

L fi f w U U Li wf a h o-R;7 3 .u n n rn. r; 1 r is vcollcgctimes.com ""i w Inside this issue Special Feature: A student's musings and reflections on the newly finished library. ft V Sports editor Matt Beaudin weighs in on what is in store with university athletics. BS L UV One card: blessing or curse? Read about the pros and cons. H6 International "Da Vinci Experience" exhibit makes a stop at the Woodbury Art Museum. Monson to give dedicatory prayer w . .. . Court fly ol Ccdkijf Mjrkftirwj Thomas S. Monson at the signing of the SB 70 bill. Jared Magill r 1 Managing editor ' President Thomas S. Monson of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been invited to attend the official university naming and ribbon cutting event on Tuesday, July 1. The ceremony will be held at 10 a.m. on the west side of the new library. According to the office of UVU President William Se-derburg, Monson, who more than 30 years ago attended the ground-breaking ceremonies for the Orem campus at the time known as Utah Technical College will offer a dedicatory prayer. Monson is scheduled to speak at a luncheon after the ribbon cutting. According to Sederburg, as of yet, no one has put up the required $10 million donation to have the new library named after him or her. In an interview with UVU Review, Sederburg said, "There's still an opportunity for your family and friends and relatives to name it after you if they want to." Tours of the new library are available during the Library Open House on Monday, June 30. i i . i 7 - 1 i 1 1 m i New UVU library is greenest building in Utah i is 5, f TT Li 'iii,; a Hanna Hopkinson p ' News writer 1 The new library at UVU is the most energy efficient building in the state. Being the first building constructed under the guidelines of Utah's High Performance Building program, the Digital Learning Center will save UVU close to $100,000 per year in utility costs. "Just walking through the halls, even in its unfinished state, I'm inspired," Gov. Jon M. Huntsman said of the library during his tour earlier this month. Gov. Huntsman, a main benefactor in the Utah building program, also noted that the library is 65-90 percent more energy efficient than buildings built to the same code. The new library's energy efficient features are extensive. The windows throughout the entire structure permit only 27 percent of the sun's heat to enter. This allows building temperature to be more easily regulated, instantly lowering utility costs. The exterior of the building has aluminum ledges called solar harvesting devices. These not only add to the library's artistic design, but they shade the interior and reflect outside heat, while taking advantage of and using natural light. In the winter, the heat generated by the hundreds of computer servers will be re-circulated into the air to warm the library. The building also includes highly efficient lighting and cooling technology, directindirect evaporative cooling,ul-trahigh-efficiency ballasts and lamps with daylight switching and occupancy sensors, and light-colored roofing to reduce building heat. Additionally, the library takes advantage of the geothermal wells the campus has already been using by transferring heat in and out of the building through aquifers under campus. "The library is unbe- See LIBRARY A4 . i The new Digital Learning Center is one-of-a-kind in Utah. It is 65-90 percent more energy efficient than any other building built in the same code. The building will save UVU close to $100,000 per year in utility costs by using devices such as the exterior solar harvesting devices which shade the interior while reflecting outside heat. It will also recirculate heat generated by computer servers to warm the library during the winters. Sederburg7 s influence from college to university President Sederburg showing his school spirit. He had been the mastermind at establishing university status. Jared Magill f Managing editor It has been years in the making and now the day has officially come. The countless fundraisers, debates on the floor of the state senate, and marketing campaigns have brought the school to the eve of its ascension to university status. There have been many whose efforts have been conspicuously influential throughout the transition, but none more than President William Sederburg. UVU Review recently sat down with our buddy Bill to hear his side of the story. The conversation ranged from the individual successes and defeats along the way, plans for the future of the institution and the future of the man himself. From his days of expanding Ferris State University in Michigan to his current expansion of UVSC to UVU, President Sederburg has taken higher education to a higher level. President Sederburg has set up the ways in which UVU will offer the engaging education he envisions at the school. To read more about President Seder-burg's vision for UVU see page A5. To read about President Sederburg's possible future plans see page A8. In Memory of Christopher Kirsch 1945-2008 Christopher Kirsch, a UVU professor in geography and Latin American history, was killed on Father's day by a fatal stabbing by his son. A few of his colleagues shared their thoughts with UVU Review about Chris and his time at UVU. See Kirsch A4 T r T : i